I sent this email to all my support list after my chemo session on June 29, 2016
Hi, some good news to report. Today’s PSA is 47 down from 84 (I should post a daily update on that number. It would become a big secret betting combine). That decline is 3 weeks after my first chemo. Good. I had chemo 2 today. Also today I began the process to enter a clinical trial for a drug being tested for prostate cancer. The drug is ipilimumab or “ippy”. The common name is Yervoy manufactured by Bristol Myers Squibb. I thank our good friends Angeles and Dennis Vitrella for listening attentively to an NPR broadcast and then following up with MD Anderson who ran the trials on the drug where it was shown as effective with some types of melanoma. I will find out in about a week if I can get into the trial. I hope so. A little miracle cure would just make my 2016. Link to the original broadcast: http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/06/09/480435066/a-scientists-dream-fulfilled-harnessing-the-immune-system-to-fight-cancer
As always, thank you for your support.
Hug the ones you love, (and periodically throw in a stranger or someone you don’t love so much)
Dan
Thursday, June 30, 2016
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Answers to a Nephew -- 4
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This is the fourth section of my answers to my nephew. If you have not read the previous sections, I advise you to read them now.
“How have you changed your life knowing you have an expiration date?"
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“How have you changed your life knowing you have an expiration date?"
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The question about changing my life is really interesting. Since I
don’t have a bucket list, I am not dropping everything to pursue one (as for
instance in the movie The Bucket List). And I already mentioned that I/we have
to deal with end of life issues. But what happens is another question presents
itself: What should I be doing? How
do I or what do I do to suck the marrow out of the remaining days? I really
don’t know. That is troubling to me and I will work on this issue more as time
goes on (though I hope for not too long as I would like to get on with whatever
it is). But to help me I got to thinking of my two summers in Glacier Park in
Montana. To me those two summers are absolutely golden. They are magic. They
are highpoints of my life. I hiked all through the mountains, trying as many
new trails as I could. During those experiences though I had a feeling of
liberation and freedom—the mountains all around (I remember the thrill of seeing
the first snows up high in late August when I was on my way to breakfast in the
Boy Room), the sense of being in a very desirable place, and the sense of
participating (we did a lot together—hiking, drinking, singing.) But then I
begin to think of the realities there. I knew my magical time there would end.
I lived in a dorm room with 6 other guys. The bathroom was down the hall. I
worked in a gas station with a gravel surface that was dusty all the time. I
pumped gas and washed bug-infested car windows and changed oil. In one way it
was a pretty grungy existence..
So how can that magic appear in what I have now? What can I say? I
lived the life that was there in front of me. What can I do now? Participate.
Share. Love what I see. I have to admit I understand already in just a few days
since The News that I really understand what it means to live for today and
find joy in the now. The clouds have never looked so spectacular as they do
these days. I think the answer is there. Should
is not out there somewhere. A destination somewhere else. Should is here, now, and I have to participate in that reality as
best I can, in spite of the dusty workplace and large shared dorm room.
I hope to write more on these topics and in the meantime I hope you
will comment on my answers and share them with whomever. Eventually I will
probably place this document on my blog. Thank you for the questions. I love
doing this stuff—you have to confront the bad, stare it down--and I admire your
willingness to wade in and ask.
Hi to all the kids. See you soon.
Love,
Uncle Dan
Answers to a Nephew--1
Here is one of the questions my nephew asked me. Actually this is the last question in his list but I answered it first in the long email I wrote him. That explains my first sentence.
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" Do you feel rushed to complete a bucket list?”
Let me start with your last question—a bucket list. No, I don’t have
one. Years ago an older guy in the neighborhood told us how he and his wife
would start travelling just as soon as they retired in two years. Then she
died. He never travelled. We decided then that we would do our travelling and
our spending throughout our lives and not wait. So now I don’t have a bucket
list. I can think of places to go and things to do, but none of them are
‘essential.’ I won’t be lying on my death bed thinking “oh shit, why didn’t I
ever…” Where could we go? Rome, northern Italy, Germany, Denmark, Norway,
Lowell where the Riordans first lived in the US, Northern New York where the
Palmers lived for about 150 years before they moved to Minnesota, New York
City, Washington DC, the Georgia Coast, some of the great hikes in the American
and Canadian Rockies. But if I don’t get to any of those, I have no regrets. I
have been to most of them. What would I like to do? The only thing I can think
of is paragliding in the Alps. When we were there a couple years ago we saw
people doing that—the expert on top and the client underneath sailing around in
the air currents. Maybe that will happen. I doubt it and if it doesn’t, I’ll be
just fine. I think that the thing to do is create a bucket list when you are
young and work on it. For instance we wanted to go to all 50 states. It took us
about 40 years but we finally got all of them. I think the two real bucket list
things I did was go to Europe (first time was when I visited your dad in
Russia) and then to go to the Botticelli Room in Florence. I had a real sense
of accomplishing something I always wanted to do with those two trips.
Answers to a Nephew--2
Here is part two of my answers to my nephew. If you have not read the introduction and the first part, I advise you to go read those first.
“In your email you mention to think in terms of a year. Was that a
major blow to hear that? My dad told me that the cancer you have is not curable
basically, but a year seems like a tough pill to swallow."
Was it a major blow to get the news? Well, yes and no. I have known
for years that my cancer is incurable and that one day a doctor would tell me what
I heard the other day. I have heard other guestimates before (3-5 years, I
year) but with each of these estimates there were always more treatments
available. The deal with this one is that it is the last treatment in the
sequence of treatments. I think I have had 9 or 10. I never counted, but this
is it. The only hope I have is that my body just defies the disease longer or
that they perfect a gene therapy that would work. I know that they are working
on the latter but I suspect it will not be ready in time. We’ll see. And yes. It
was a real punch to the stomach. But what can I say? I had been preparing for
this and was delighted to find that I didn’t crumble when I got the news. That
has been one of the gifts of cancer. I have never been sure how I would handle
this news. And now I know and I have done OK.
In a curious way the date is good to know. Knowing it focuses me on things
I have to get done in what is called End of Life planning. Get the will up to
date, get all the beneficiary stuff correct, get the house in shape to sell
after I die (just talked to a carpenter about replacing some rot in the
foundation, another couple of grand). And I have to winnow my photo collection
down and all my other papers and computer files so that the good stuff can stay
and make sense to people and the nonessential stuff gets tossed.
Answers to a Nephew--3
This is the third section of my answers to questions my nephew asked me about my one-year timeline. If you have not read the introduction and first two parts of this long entry, I advise you to go back and do so.
“Is it ever difficult to keep such a positive attitude and how has
that changed? Was it tougher years ago to hear bad news or tougher now? Do you
ever just get super fucking pissed off? Does Aunt Mary have the same positive
attitude? The kids?"
The positive attitude is easier to maintain since I found out that I
don’t have fear. I could never say that this is easy, though. The awareness of
a date hovers in the background, like vultures riding wind currents in my head.
The issue isn’t so much keeping the attitude as keeping the interest. Some days
it is just real easy to think “Oh I’ll get to that tomorrow” or “I don’t really
care.” It is just a kind of depression
that hits in. And sometimes I really don’t feel up to exercise, even walking up
and down steps to do some little errand. I guess as I write this that it is
hard to not let those depressive moments take over. But I haven’t had too much
trouble rallying. I am trying to do this part of my life in a way that helps
other people deal with this kind of experience. I am trying to do this with
some finesse, to be a model. It is the major reason that I am so open about
what is going on with me. Actually what is is really hard is the limit that is
placed on planning. Everything revolves around the three-week cycle of chemo. I
would like to climb once a week. Can’t do it. Maybe I can get one climb in the
week before chemo. We think about going to NYC or to Europe—we can afford it
and we have mileage besides. Still, saying “All right, we’ll have this week in
NYC, those 2-3 weeks in Europe,” is really hard to do. I guess the answer is
just do it and worry about the pieces if things fall apart (some of the best
financial advice I ever to was “new data, new plan”—it works for just about everything
not just retirement savings.)
It was tougher years ago to hear bad news. The washer breaks. The
transmission needs to be replaced. No raise this year. They didn’t like my
article or my presentation. There is an issue with kids. Now it is easier. Part
of it is that I am older, part is that I have enough money, part is that this
reality has been with me for 8 plus years. I think it is much easier to deal
with this than what I have seen happen to younger people. For instance a young
friend had a baby born weeks early. It lived two hours. That blow will take
years to overcome. Grandma had to do that with Mary Claire. I and everyone who
has supported me in all this is already prepared.
No I don’t get fucking pissed off. Here is the deal. All I have to
do is die. Mary has to get me and her through that and then start a new life. She
has periods of being pissed off but she doesn’t share a lot of that with me. It
would be ok if she did. I sure don’t mind helping, and returning the support
favors she bestows on me. I am not sure about the kids. They have not told me
much about their feelings, except that it is emotional when I send out the news
that my time is limited. Again it would be ok if I heard about it. What I want
is candid clear questions and reports and what I want to be able to do is give
candid clear answers.
Back on chemo/Introduction to Answers to a Nephew's Questions
Well, no chemo didn't last long. On June 8, 2016, I started a second round of chemo, this time for at least six sessions every three weeks. The drug I am being given is Jevtana aka Cabazitaxel. Like the last one I feel good for several days, then tired and 'stomachy' for about 5 days, and then gradually ok. I have my second session tomorrow and I will also find out my new PSA number. By early June it had risen from 12 to 84 and the tumors were evident along my peritoneal wall. The facts, however, came with a new unsettling prognosis. The oncologist gave me 8-12 months to live. Yikes. I sent the information out in an email to children, siblings, inlaws and many supportive friends and relatives. I had, as I have repeatedly had, numerous expressions of support. Those expressions feel very good. One of my nephews wrote me a series of questions, very candid, that I will answer over the next few posts. I urge you to read them as they give a good sense of where I am physically, but more, emotionally.
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